• 0 Items - £0.00
    • No products in the cart.

£34.99

Voters or Consumers

Imagining the contemporary electorate
Edited By: Darren Lilleker, Richard Scullion

£34.99

This collection asks whether the consumer, not the voter, is now central to politics. It explores political consumerism, party branding, and how consumer behaviour models can explain voting and political communication.

This edited collection seeks to map current thinking and practice in order to assess the extent to which the consumer, as opposed to the voter,…
£34.99
£34.99
Share

This edited collection seeks to map current thinking and practice in order to assess the extent to which the consumer, as opposed to the voter, should now to be elevated to a central position within our understanding of the relationship between the public and political spheres. The volume will firstly offer an overview of how consumerism has been applied to our understanding of political and voter behaviour so outlining the book’s key concepts. The volume then follows a processual approach to developing its analysis, offering essays that explore contrasting critical perspectives on the topic. The group of essays focus on conceptualising political consumerism; the next look at how political organisations use the tools of positioning and branding, so developing an overview of consumer-driven political behaviour. The focus then moves to the nature of political communication, both by parties and the media, and how this reflects the neo-liberal ontological perspective that encourages voting to be treated as part of consumer behaviour. Finally the book turns to the voter-consumer, looking firstly at the processing of messages and how this can be analysed from a consumerist perspective; and finally on voting behaviour itself, exploring the extent to which rational choice and economic models of voting have been increasingly a reflection of a consumerist perspective.

Each chapter will approach the subject from a discrete perspective which will be outlined within its introduction. However the chapters will each explore the following:
• Whether parties or voters are approaching one another using consumerist perspectives;
• How this can be mapped empirically through specific examples or case studies;
• The extent to which consumer behaviour models and perspectives help us understand voter or party behaviour.

Darren G. Lilleker is Senior Lecturer in the Bournemouth Media School. Recent publications include Political Marketing in ComparativePerspective (MUP, 2004), The marketing of political parties (MUP, 206) and Key Concepts in Political Communication (Sage, 2006) as well as numerous of journal articles in this and related areas. Dr Lilleker is also Chair of the PSA political marketing group.

Richard Scullion is a Senior Lecturer in Marketing Communications, Media School, Bournemouth and a PhD candidate at the LSE, Media Department. He has written on the subject of political marketing for the last eight years and is secretary of the Academy of Marketing Special Interest group ‘political marketing’. Recent publications include articles in the International Journal of Advertising and was co-editor of the book ‘The Marketing of Political Parties. Political Marketing at the 2005 British General Election.

Hardback

  • ISBN: 1-84718-399-9
  • ISBN13: 978-1-84718-399-6
  • Date of Publication: 2007-12-18

Ebook

  • ISBN: 1-4438-1075-4
  • ISBN13: 978-1-4438-1075-3
  • Date of Publication: 2007-12-18

Subject Codes:

  • BIC: JPA
  • THEMA: JPA
250